2:^4 Occasioiuil f\i(^crs llcniicc I'. Bishop M uscuui 



cairn has been ereclcil on its east end. Along- the ridge we found 

 tive more pebbles and two small pieces of horned coral. 



OTIIKK S'l'KUC'l'rKIvS ON T 1 1 K Kl.M 



In ex])loring the north rim of the Crater from 1 lanakauhi 

 summit to I'alaha. we found two platf(n-ms. One is merely a 

 pavement of large smooth roCks meaiu'ing 6 feet by i8 feet over- 

 k)oking Kalua o Umi. The other ])latform on the summit of 

 I lanakauhi, is completely in ruins. Our attention was tirst directed 

 to this platform by tlie following remark made in the Coast and 

 Geodetic Survey records of the station. For I lanakauhi: "Station 

 Mark: a pillar of stone lo feet high o)i an ancient platform, mali- 

 ciously demolished in 1884." On the west slope of Red Hill is a 

 group of 25 shelters, and between Red Hill and Kolekole Hill 

 another group of 8 or 9 with a great many small ahus. The 

 craters of three large cones in the desolate Haupaakea section 

 of the rim are barren of structures. 



The summit of White Hill is completely covered with large, 

 strongly constructed shelters. Just west of the summit cairn a 

 crevice in a small clifif is sealed by stones and cement. On the 

 ground ten feet away is a table composed of four large, flat 

 stones one on top of the other with cement between. These are 

 the work of W. D. Alexander during his survey of Haleakala and, 

 together with the large stone corral near by, should not be con- 

 fused with the Hawaiian structures in the crater. 



Dr. George Aiken and Mr. W. J- D. Walker of Hamakua- 

 poko, Maui, report a platform on the rim of the Crater just north 

 of White Hill. 



[ 20 



